Search results
New Orleans
- New Orleans in the 1920s is the new setting for The Princess and the Frog, with an emphasis on the robust sound of jazz music and African American culture at the time.
People also ask
Is The Frog Princess a true story?
Is the Frog Princess a 21st century story?
What is the Frog Princess about?
Why is the Frog Princess a Slavic tale?
Sep 2, 2002 · The Frog Princess inspired the Disney's Princess and the Frog! E. D. Baker was born in Buffalo, New York and spent most of the next eighteen years in the Town of Tonawanda with her older brother and her parents.
- (27.8K)
- Paperback
Ivan's arrow lands in the mouth of a frog in a swamp, who turns into a princess at night. The Frog Princess, named Vasilisa the Wise, is a beautiful, intelligent, friendly, skilled young woman, who was forced to spend three years in a frog's skin for disobeying Koschei. Her final test may be to dance at the king's banquet.
The Frog Princess is a novel by E. D. Baker. First published in 2002, the story is a spoof on the German fairy tale " The Frog Prince ." The 2009 Disney film The Princess and the Frog is loosely based on this novel.
- E. D. Baker
- 2002
The Tales of the Frog Princess Series. 9 primary works • 10 total works. The book The Frog Princess follows the adventures of Princess Emma, who kisses a Frog Prince and then turns into a frog.
Sep 2, 2002 · The Frog Princess is the first book in the series, detailing the adventures of Princess Emeralda as she is suddenly turned into a frog. Princess Emeralda isn't exactly an ideal princess. Her laugh is like a donkey's bray rather than tinkling bells, she trips over her own feet and she does NOT...
Nov 21, 2023 · The Frog Princess is a youth fiction novel by E.D. Baker, published in 2002 by Bloomsbury Publishing. Loosely based on the classic Grimm fairytale story The Frog King by Jacob and Wilhelm...
Oct 18, 2021 · The Frog Princess is a Slavic folktale focusing on the importance of recognizing someone’s inner beauty, regardless of their outward appearance, as well as the possibility of redemption after failure. The tale has many variants and appears in Czech, Hungarian, Italian, and Russian folk works as well as many others.